Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

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Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

Sara Inner Healing Meditation-and-abundance-in-harmony-300x200 Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

A Jewish Perspective on Wealth

Many spiritually inclined people carry quiet guilt around money. They want financial stability, comfort, and even abundance—yet fear that desiring wealth makes them greedy, shallow, or “less spiritual.” This inner conflict creates confusion, self-sabotage, and often chronic financial struggle.

From a Jewish and Torah-based perspective, this struggle does not come from spirituality itself. It comes from misunderstanding wealth.

The Torah Does Not Teach Poverty as Holiness

Contrary to popular belief, the Torah does not glorify poverty. Many of the greatest spiritual figures in Jewish history were materially wealthy—Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, King David, and King Solomon among them. Their wealth was not seen as corruption but as evidence of alignment.

The Torah warns against worshipping wealth, not possessing it.

Wanting money is not unspiritual. Confusing money as the source of security and identity is the problem.

When money replaces God as the source, fear dominates. When money is seen as a tool entrusted by God, peace increases.

Wealth Is a Responsibility, Not a Reward

Jewish wisdom frames wealth as stewardship.

“It is He who gives you the power to create wealth.”

This verse does not say wealth is earned purely through effort. It teaches that the capacity for wealth is granted. This reframes money from entitlement to responsibility.

Wanting wealth becomes unspiritual only when:

  • it feeds ego

  • it replaces ethical boundaries

  • it disconnects a person from service, humility, and gratitude

When wealth is sought to build stability, support family, contribute to others, and live with dignity, it aligns with Torah values.

Why Spiritual People Often Struggle Financially

Many spiritually inclined individuals unconsciously associate holiness with self-denial. They overgive, undercharge, avoid structure, and reject discipline—believing this makes them virtuous.

In reality, this often leads to:

  • chronic stress

  • resentment

  • burnout

  • dependency

  • financial chaos

Kabbalah teaches that lack of boundaries is not holiness—it is imbalance.

Sarainnerhealing emphasizes that financial wellness is inseparable from emotional and mental wellness. Avoiding money does not make one spiritual; it often signals unresolved fear, guilt, or distorted beliefs about worth.

Ego Is the Real Spiritual Risk — Not Money

Jewish wisdom warns strongly about ego, not wealth.

“He who does not master his ego becomes a slave to it.”

Sara Inner Healing Financial-Code-Book-Cover-194x300 Is Wanting Money Unspiritual?

Personal Financial Wellness Code

Ego shows up financially through:

  • status spending

  • comparison

  • greed

  • fear-based hoarding

  • impulsive consumption

Money does not create ego—it reveals it.

A person who has not mastered their thoughts, emotions, and desires will experience “leaks” regardless of income. Wealth without ego mastery leads to instability, anxiety, and loss.

True spirituality trains the individual to:

  • regulate desire

  • restrain impulse

  • act intentionally

  • respond rather than react

This inner mastery allows wealth to be held safely.

Tithing Clarifies the Relationship With Money

Tithing is central to Torah-based wealth consciousness. It establishes correct orientation.

Tithing:

  • removes the illusion of ownership

  • humbles the ego

  • restores trust in divine provision

  • keeps wealth flowing

People who refuse to tithe often live in fear, even when wealthy. People who tithe correctly develop confidence, clarity, and peace.

Tithing transforms money from an idol into a servant.

Discipline Is Spiritual, Not Restrictive

Another misconception is that discipline contradicts spirituality. In Torah wisdom, discipline is a sign of maturity.

Spiritual discipline includes:

  • intentional spending

  • saving and investing at least 20%

  • avoiding debt driven by desire

  • planning rather than reacting

Sarainnerhealing teaches that financial discipline is emotional regulation in action. A regulated inner world creates a stable outer life.

Without discipline, wealth destabilizes. With discipline, wealth becomes supportive.

Wealth Requires Relational and Ethical Alignment

Jewish wisdom teaches that blessing rests where there is unity and love. Broken relationships, dishonesty, exploitation, and unresolved conflict create spiritual blockages that affect finances.

This does not mean perfection. It means responsibility.

Wealth thrives where there is:

  • ethical conduct

  • respect for others

  • fair exchange

  • integrity

Money gained at the cost of relationships carries a spiritual burden.

Wanting Wealth With the Right Orientation Is Healthy

The real question is not “Is it unspiritual to want money?”
The question is: Why do you want it, and who are you becoming in the process?

When wealth is desired:

  • without ego

  • with discipline

  • with ethical grounding

  • with spiritual alignment

It becomes a blessing, not a test.

Torah wisdom does not ask you to reject wealth. It asks you to become the kind of person who can carry it without being consumed by it.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE RESOURCES:

Personal Finance  Code

Financial Healing For Abundance Kabbalistic and Psalms  Prayers

Thrive Within For   Wellness  Program –  Try it for free   no  credit card required

Author: Sara Ahavah